Amerindians March For Land

By Bert Wilkinson, IPS, 30 August 1999

GEORGETOWN, Aug 30 (IPS) - They will cross huge mountains, defy
snake-infested jungle swamps and swim across rivers all in the name of
making a point to the Guyana government.

Come early October, 10,000 Amerindians- about a fifth of their number-
from all of the country's nine tribes will embark on a
1,000-kilometre march from Guyana's southernmost tip to Georgetown
in a show of disgust at the way authorities have been dealing with the
distribution of land to them.

The historic march, by a group, traditionally considered docile, will
begin at Akutho in the heart of a village inhabited by a tribe called
the Wai Wais, move 300 kms to the main southwest town of Lethem and
through dense jungle to the capital, all the way picking up members of
other tribes.

The procession that is expected to involve women, children and even
the infirm riding in bush trucks, will last at least a month
with large groups of experienced hunters going ahead to ensure a ready
supply of food for those on the journey.

The issue is what organisers call a deliberate plan by the governing
People's Progressive Party (PPP) and previous administrations to
delay implementing recommendations that would give the country's
55,000 Amerindians about 40,000 sq kms of titled lands.

There are great precedents for this. We all know that our ancestors
crossed great land masses from Mongolia in Central Asia to North,
Central and South America. They crossed the Pacific Ocean, the
largest, to many lands around the world, so this march should not be
anything to us, says Colin Klautky of the Guyana Organisation of
Indigenous Peoples (GOIP).

Our ancestors have done this before and now it is our turn, he
adds.

The government last year sent in a team using all kinds of fancy
equipment and came up with land areas that are smaller than what we
had. They should settle the issue once and for all, says
Christine Lowe, an Amerindian school teacher and rights activist.

The issue has been festering for several years. At the close of the
1960s, a British land rights commission had recommended that
Amerindians, comprising six percent of the country's population be
granted titles to an estimated 40,000 sq kms of land. Guyana's
total land area is 215,000 sq kms.

It all started from a petition carried to Queen Elizabeth in 1965 by
late Amerindian activist Stephen Campbell as preparations were being
made for Guyana's independence from Britain in 1966.

A commission was later established and handed in its recommendations
to the then Forbes Burnham government. One of the main recommendations
- the award of large areas of land to these indigenous people - has
never been fully adhered to by any administration..

Signs of trouble in the indigenous communities over the rights issue
flared up in late 1968 when a group, calling for a separate homeland,
attacked government buildings, killing seven policemen and controlling
the main town of Lethem for several days.

Guyana Defence Force soldiers, using commercial aircraft, eventually
put down the rebellion, arrested a few ringleaders and restored order.
Many of those who participated settled in neighbouring Brazilian
towns, but many have also been returning in recent years, attempting
to reclaim their lands.

As an indication of how serious they have become, a group from the
western Upper Mazaruni District last year took the administration to
court with the aim of settling the issue.

In doing this, they have taken heart from victories from other
indigenous groups in New Zealand and Australia where some governments
have been both forced to pay financial compensation and to revert
ancestral lands to tribes.

Now the court action is being bolstered by an unprecedented march on
the capital and planners say they are confident it will win widespread
sympathy.

In the last two years, government officials have been photographed
handing out titles to land to several communities. Even in this,
leaders say, the awards have been below expectations and in some
cases, traditional hunting grounds have been handed out to foreign
mining and timber companies.

Klautky says authorities are also reluctant to grant titles to
communities that are mixed, meaning those in which tribe members have
married people from other races.

They had better solve this question or the situation could get out
of hand, he says.

So far about 10,000 sq kms of land have been doled out to just under
50 percent of communities entitled to awards.

Organisers say they are also using the march as a means of bringing
together and uniting members from all nine tribes to ensure they get
what he calls a fair piece of the pie as we are the pre-Colombian
people.

There is also a grouse regarding new villages, meaning those which
have relocated in recent years. Activists argue that these have to be
recognised as well, given the traditional nomadic nature of
Amerindians.

And while planners are careful to distance themselves from a political
agenda, several of their better known activists, have, in recent
months, been mooting the idea of a distinct Amerindian party that
could in fact hold the balance of power in the country, with at least
six seats.

May not be reproduced, reprinted or posted to any system or
service outside of the APC networks, without specific
permission from IPS. This limitation includes distribution
via Usenet News, bulletin board systems, mailing lists,
print media and broadcast. For information about cross-
posting, send a message to <wdesk@ips.org>. For
information about print or broadcast reproduction please
contact the IPS coordinator at <online@ips.org>.